Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects

Compare revisions

Changes are shown as if the source revision was being merged into the target revision. Learn more about comparing revisions.

Source

Select target project
No results found

Target

Select target project
  • danc/MicroCART
  • snawerdt/MicroCART_17-18
  • bbartels/MicroCART_17-18
  • jonahu/MicroCART
4 results
Show changes
Showing
with 0 additions and 1562 deletions
This diff is collapsed.
# Example toolchain file for building with mingw32 on Ubuntu 10.04 x64
# Pass to CMake using cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=MinGWToolchain.cmake
# Not needed when actually building on Windows using mingw, only when
# cross-compiling
# the name of the target operating system
set(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Windows)
# which compilers to use for C and C++
set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER i586-mingw32msvc-gcc)
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER i586-mingw32msvc-g++)
set(CMAKE_RC_COMPILER i586-mingw32msvc-windres)
# here is the target environment located
set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
/usr/i586-mingw32msvc
$ENV{HOME}/mingw-install)
# adjust the default behaviour of the FIND_XXX() commands:
# search headers and libraries in the target environment, search
# programs in the host environment
set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_PROGRAM NEVER)
set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_LIBRARY ONLY)
set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE ONLY)
This diff is collapsed.
IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION for offsite use is in README.Legal
IMPORTANT compiling at other sites information in README.Compile
NOTE: See http://www.vrpn.org for
information on VRPN.
This diff is collapsed.
The initial release of VRPN (The Virtual Reality Peripheral Network) was placed into the public domain on 5/4/1998 by the copyright holder Russell M. Taylor II at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
To protect all VRPN contributors from liability without restricting the use of VRPN, as of July 22, 2010, future versions of VRPN (versions 7.27 and higher) are being released under the Boost Software License 1.0, which is as follows:
Boost Software License 1.0 (BSL1.0)
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person or organization obtaining a copy of the software and accompanying documentation covered by this license (the "Software") to use, reproduce, display, distribute, execute, and transmit the Software, and to prepare derivative works of the Software, and to permit third-parties to whom the Software is furnished to do so, all subject to the following:
The copyright notices in the Software and this entire statement, including the above license grant, this restriction and the following disclaimer, must be included in all copies of the Software, in whole or in part, and all derivative works of the Software, unless such copies or derivative works are solely in the form of machine-executable object code generated by a source language processor.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR ANYONE DISTRIBUTING THE SOFTWARE BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Additional requests follow:
1. Please acknowledge this library in any publication, written, videotaped,
or otherwise produced, that results from making programs using it.
The acknowledgement will credit
CISMM Project
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Supported by the NIH/NCRR and the NIH/NIBIB.
2. Please furnish us a copy of any publication, including videotape,
that you produce and disseminate outside your group using our
program. These should be addressed to Professor R.M. Taylor
at taylorr@cs.unc.edu.
3. Please send us derived classes and drivers for new devices that you
create for the library. We will attempt to include them in
future releases of the library for you and others to use. This
is the fastest way to get a working system for everyone.
This diff is collapsed.
This diff is collapsed.
python_vrpn:
VRPN wrapped in Python using Swig. Works with Python 2.7.
python:
Hand-written Python classes that work with Python 2.7 and 3.2.
Compile the main library (ie.: root of VRPN) and the quat library. Then, go to the "python" folder. Before making the binary, you have to define the "PYTHON_VERSION" environment variable to the version of python you want to compile it for (ie.: "3.2", "2.7" ...). And you have to put the resulting vrpn.so shared library (found in $HW_OS/$PYTHON_VERSION) in the python module folder or in a path defined in the PYTHONPATH environment variable.
The "essai_*.py" are simple python files that show you how to use this module (the single difference is a call to python3.2 or python2.7 interpreter).
This diff is collapsed.
This diff is collapsed.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<classpath>
<classpathentry kind="src" path="src"/>
<classpathentry kind="src" path="gen"/>
<classpathentry kind="con" path="com.android.ide.eclipse.adt.ANDROID_FRAMEWORK"/>
<classpathentry kind="src" path="vrpn_library_src"/>
<classpathentry kind="output" path="bin"/>
</classpath>
This diff is collapsed.
This diff is collapsed.